ANTHONY J. AND DENISE D. SADBERRY, Petitioners v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent
Docket No. 10499-02
UNITED STATES TAX COURT
Filed February 18, 2004
T.C. Memo. 2004-40
COUVILLION, Special Trial Judge
R. Scott Shieldes, for respondent.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
COUVILLION, Special Trial Judge: Respondent determined a deficiency of $22,255 in petitioners’ Federal income tax and a penalty of $4,433 under
Some of the facts were stipulated, and those facts, with the annexed exhibits, are so found and are incorporated herein by reference. At the time the petition was filed, petitioners’ legal residence was Caldwell, Texas.
Anthony Sadberry (petitioner) was born in Caldwell, Texas, in 1949. During the year at issue, he was married to petitioner
Petitioner‘s education includes a bachelor‘s degree from the University of Texas at Austin and a law degree from Georgetown University Law Center at Washington, D.C. Upon receiving his law degree in 1975, petitioner was employed in the Office of the Attorney General for the State of Texas for 2 years. From 1977 until the date of trial, petitioner was engaged in the private practice of law at various firms in Houston and San Antonio, Texas. His area of practice is commercial litigation. Additionally, petitioner has served as a member of the Attorney Admissions Committee for the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas. In 1993, petitioner received a gubernatorial appointment to the Texas Lottery Commission, on which he served as a commissioner until 2001. As an appointed State official, petitioner was required to and did file personal financial statements with the Texas Ethics Commission.
When petitioner commenced law practice, most firms did not have retirements plans. Petitioner undertook his own financial and retirement planning, which he continued throughout his career. Initially, he invested primarily in certificates of
In 1993, petitioner became a name partner in the law firm of Oldenettel & Sadberry. His partner was Rick Oldenettel. The law firm had a qualified
During 1996, petitioner purchased a number of annuities. In May, he purchased a nonqualified annuity from Glenbrook Life and Annuity with proceeds he received from the settlement of a lawsuit (Glenbrook nonqualified annuity).4 In June, he purchased a second nonqualified annuity from Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance Co., funded with an initial contribution of petitioner‘s regular CDs (SFB nonqualified annuity).5 In
In August 1996, petitioner left the Oldenettel & Sadberry firm to join the law firm of Soules & Wallace in San Antonio. Soules & Wallace did not have a
In addition to planning for retirement, a principal factor that influenced petitioner‘s financial decisions was the education of his daughter, Andrea. Initially, through her experience with horses on petitioners’ ranch, Andrea had intended to enroll at Texas A&M University. However, she was also an accomplished flutist at an early age. While attending the High School for Performing and Visual Arts (HSPVA) in Houston, she decided to pursue musical rather than agricultural endeavors. Petitioner accompanied Andrea to auditions at various conservatories, including Julliard in New York City, Oberlin College in Ohio, Curtis Institute in Philadelphia, and the Eastman School of Music (Eastman) in Rochester, New York. Travel, private instruction, and other expenses were incurred in connection with these auditions. Andrea was accepted and decided to enroll in Eastman.
Petitioner realized that Andrea‘s musical studies would cost significantly more than a Texas A&M degree, which he had
On January 21, 1999, petitioner requested a distribution of $330,000 from the SFB nonqualified annuity (SFB distribution). He requested that Southern Farm Bureau withhold 10 percent of the gross distribution, or $33,000, for Federal income taxes. Petitioner explained why he requested that the withholding be calculated from the gross amount of the distribution, rather than from the taxable portion, as he testified:
to be safe. I knew enough to know that only a certain amount of it was going to be taxable * * *. And I said, Well, $33,000 ought to cover it * * *. I was getting a certain amount of money in the IRS’ hands, in case I‘m wrong about this whole thing.
On January 30, 1999, Southern Farm Bureau issued a check to petitioner in the net amount of $297,000, after withholding $33,000 income taxes. With these funds, petitioner purchased a
Petitioner also requested four distributions from the Glenbrook nonqualified annuity during 1999 (Glenbrook distributions). These distributions totaled $76,408.13. Petitioner requested that Glenbrook withhold 10 percent of the taxable portions of the distributions, or $1,269.25, for Federal income tax purposes. Those distributions, like the Southern Farm Bureau distribution, were reported to the Internal Revenue Service and to petitioners on Forms 1099-R. The taxable amount of the Glenbrook distributions was $12,692.51. Thus, the taxable distributions from the Southern Farm Bureau and Glenbrook nonqualified annuities totaled $61,549.38, and the total income tax withholdings from both payers was $34,265.26.
During 1999, petitioner was approached by officials at Georgetown University Law Center (Georgetown) to contribute to the school‘s African-American Scholarship Endowment. Since he
Petitioners filed a joint, self-prepared Federal income tax return timely for 1999 (original return) on which they reported the following income:
| Salaries & wages | $145,675.15 |
| Taxable interest income | 577.97 |
| Unemployment compensation | 5,594.00 |
| Other income (Form 1099) | 3,396.60 |
| Total income | $155,243.72 |
No income was reported on Line 16a of the return for pension and annuity income. The return shows an income tax liability of $34,538.64, Federal income taxes withheld of $35,524.89, and an overpayment of $986.26, which was in due course refunded to petitioners. The $35,524.89 in taxes withheld did not include the taxes withheld in the SFB and Glenbrook annuity distributions earlier described. Lines 50 through 56 of the tax return, Form 1040, is for “other taxes“; Line 53 is for “Tax on IRAs and other retirement plans.” Petitioners did not report any amount on Line
On April 25, 2000, petitioner signed a notarized personal financial statement for 1999, which he filed with the Texas Ethics Commission as required of him as a member of the Texas Lottery Commission. He listed on that report the Southern Farm Bureau and Glenbrook distributions, including the gross and taxable portions of the distributions.
In the notice of deficiency and accompanying explanations, respondent determined that petitioners failed to include on their original and amended returns the taxable annuity proceeds of $61,548.12 Respondent adhered to the $6,154.94 penalty that petitioners self-assessed on their amended return for the $61,549.38 taxable portion of early distributions by Southern Farm Bureau and Glenbrook. Respondent included the previously unreported SFB and Glenbrook distributions as gross income, determined that self-employment tax was due, and allowed a corresponding deduction for one-half of such tax. Respondent reduced petitioners’ exemptions deduction under
The first issue is whether petitioners received taxable annuity proceeds of $61,548.
Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, gross income includes any amount received as an annuity (whether for a period certain or during one or more lives) under an annuity, endowment, or life insurance contract.
Petitioners do not deny having received the distributions in question and do not dispute the Glenbrook and Southern Farm Bureau allocations between the taxable and nontaxable portions of the distributions as reported on Forms 1099-R. Petitioner reported the same allocations on his financial disclosure forms filed with the Texas Ethics Commission.
Nevertheless, petitioners disagree with respondent‘s determination that $61,548 should be taxed. First, they contend that the distributions of SFB and Glenbrook were rolled over. They argue that a partial rollover occurred when petitioners’ second refund from the IRS of $27,753.13, plus interest, was received and transferred over to the SFB nonqualified annuity.13 They argue that the date of their actual receipt of the second refund from the IRS, rather than the date of the SFB
The Court disagrees that a rollover occurred or could have occurred. A rollover occurs when distributions from certain qualified retirement plans are contributed or deposited into another qualified retirement plan within a 60-day time period.
Secondly, petitioners argue that respondent is equitably estopped from contending that the SFB and Glenbrook distributions were not distributions that qualified for rollover treatment. In advancing this argument, petitioners claim to have detrimentally relied on the instructions to Form 1040 in reporting the tax consequences of their 1999 distributions. Specifically, petitioners cite page 24 of these instructions, which states: “A rollover is a tax-free distribution of cash or other assets from one retirement plan that is contributed to another plan.” Petitioners interpret these instructions to mean that they could have rolled over their distributions and eliminated their
A more complete reading of the applicable instructions undercuts petitioners’ argument. The instructions clearly state that they apply to rollovers from one qualified plan to another qualified plan.14 Petitioners’ SFB and Glenbrook nonqualified
Equitable estoppel does not apply in this case. Respondent made no misrepresentations or misleading silences to warrant estoppel. Even if the instructions to Form 1040 were misleading, and the Court declines to make such a finding, authoritative sources of Federal income tax law are statutes, regulations, and judicial decisions, not informal publications or instructions of the Internal Revenue Service. Casa de la Jolla Park, Inc. v. Commissioner, 94 T.C. 384, 396 (1990); Wenger v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo. 2000-156. Moreover, any error in the instructions was one of opinion or law, not fact. Here, petitioners knew all the facts and were not ignorant of them. They knew their plans were not qualified plans. If errors in reporting their 1999 taxes were made, it was petitioners who made them, not respondent. The elements of equitable estoppel are absent. The doctrine does not apply here. Graff v. Commissioner, 74 T.C. 743, 761 (1980), affd. 673 F.2d 784 (5th Cir. 1982).
The second issue is whether petitioners are liable for the 10-percent penalty on the Southern Farm Bureau and Glenbrook distributions under
Imposition of Penalty. If any taxpayer receives any amount under an annuity contract, the taxpayer‘s tax under this chapter for the taxable year in which such amount is received shall be increased by an amount equal to 10 percent
of the portion of such amount which is includible in gross income.
The final issue is whether petitioners are liable for the 20-percent accuracy-related penalty for substantial understatement pursuant to
An understatement may be reduced by the tax attributable to items (1) for which there is or was substantial authority, or (2) for which there was adequate disclosure of the facts relating to the tax treatment and a reasonable basis for the tax treatment.
The Court finds that petitioners lacked substantial authority for their positions with respect to the distributions in question. The only circumstance petitioners cited was their reliance on instructions to Form 1040. The instructions, read in their entirety, do not support the interpretations of petitioners
There is one additional factor to be considered in connection with this issue. As noted earlier, the 20-percent accuracy-related penalty under
Decision will be entered
under Rule 155.
Notes
Rollovers
A rollover is a tax-free distribution of cash or other assets from one retirement plan that is contributed to another plan. Use lines 16a and 16b to report a rollover, including a direct rollover, from one qualified employer‘s plan to another or to an IRA or SEP.
Enter on line 16a the total distribution before income tax or other deductions were withheld. This amount should be shown in box 1 of Form 1099-R. From the total on line 16a, subtract any contributions (usually shown in box 5) that were taxable to you when made. From that result, subtract the amount that was rolled over either directly or within 60 days of receiving the distribution. Enter the remaining amount, even if zero, on line 16b. Also, put “Rollover” next to line 16b.
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Lump-Sum Distributions
If you received a lump-sum distribution from a profit-sharing or retirement plan, your Form 1099-R should have the “Total distribution” box in box 2b checked. You may owe an additional tax if you received an early distribution from a qualified retirement plan and the total amount was not rolled over. For details, see the instructions for line 53 that begin on page 36.
Enter the total distribution on line 16a and the taxable part on line 16b.
Special rules apply to partial rollovers of property. For more details on rollovers, including distributions under qualified domestic relations orders, see Pub. 575.
